Stuff you should know: Difference between revisions
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{{a|devil|}}In a desperate attempt to stop [[salespeople]] going, “hey [[legal eagles]], can you read this email for me”, and to counterpoint lackadaisical [[credit officer]]s saying, “the question of whether we have credit risk to | {{a|devil| | ||
[[File:101.jpg|450px|frameless|center]] | |||
}}In a desperate attempt to stop [[salespeople]] going, “hey [[legal eagles]], can you read this email for me”, and to counterpoint lackadaisical [[credit officer]]s saying, “the question of whether we have [[credit risk]] to our own [[bank account]] is a legal question on which I can’t opine”<ref>Real-life quote, by the way, from a [[managing director]] in a global investment bank, to which the retort ''should'' have been, but I regret to say was not, “pal, if you are really saying you don’t know that, you need to [[get your coat]]”.</ref> we are running a snagging list of legal concepts about which no bank employee should plead ignorance. ''It is your job to know this stuff''. | |||
[[Stuff you should know]], banker’s edition, then: | [[Stuff you should know]], banker’s edition, then: | ||
* | *The ''nature'', if not necessarily the ''art'' of the deal: '''[[offer]]''', '''[[acceptance]]''' and '''[[consideration]]'''; | ||
*The nature of [[cash]] | *What an '''[[agent]]''' is, how [[agency]] works and ''why you can’t be [[agent]] for yourself''; | ||
*The difference between shares and bonds, and | *The nature of '''[[cash]]''', why '''[[money]]''' is different from '''[[property]]'''; | ||
*What | *The difference between '''[[shares]]''' and '''[[bonds]]''', where they fit in the [[capital structure]] and, indeed, what a [[capital structure]] ''is''; | ||
*How [[bank account]]s work, | *What '''[[trust]]s''' are and why we use them; | ||
*How '''[[bank account]]s''' work, what '''[[indebtedness]]''' is and what '''[[bank]]'''s do with your '''[[deposit]]'''s (and no, it isn’t “put them in a safe in a jar with your name on it”); | |||
*The difference between '''[[amendment]]''' and '''[[waiver]]'''; | |||
*The difference between '''[[title transfer]]''' and '''[[pledge]]'''; | |||
*What a [[discretionary trust]] is. | |||
*The difference between [[title transfer]] and [[pledge]]; | |||
{{sa}} | {{sa}} | ||
[[Derivatives]] as explained to [[my neighbour Phil]] | [[Derivatives]] as explained to [[my neighbour Phil]] | ||
{{ref}} | {{ref}} |
Latest revision as of 05:36, 1 July 2024
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In a desperate attempt to stop salespeople going, “hey legal eagles, can you read this email for me”, and to counterpoint lackadaisical credit officers saying, “the question of whether we have credit risk to our own bank account is a legal question on which I can’t opine”[1] we are running a snagging list of legal concepts about which no bank employee should plead ignorance. It is your job to know this stuff.
Stuff you should know, banker’s edition, then:
- The nature, if not necessarily the art of the deal: offer, acceptance and consideration;
- What an agent is, how agency works and why you can’t be agent for yourself;
- The nature of cash, why money is different from property;
- The difference between shares and bonds, where they fit in the capital structure and, indeed, what a capital structure is;
- What trusts are and why we use them;
- How bank accounts work, what indebtedness is and what banks do with your deposits (and no, it isn’t “put them in a safe in a jar with your name on it”);
- The difference between amendment and waiver;
- The difference between title transfer and pledge;
- What a discretionary trust is.
See also
Derivatives as explained to my neighbour Phil
References
- ↑ Real-life quote, by the way, from a managing director in a global investment bank, to which the retort should have been, but I regret to say was not, “pal, if you are really saying you don’t know that, you need to get your coat”.